Wyoming Sheriff bans cowboy dress in true Western town

The new sheriff in Wyoming has imposed a dress code banning his subordinates from wearing cowboy hats and boots to make them look unified. However, the move has made his deputy sheriff retire after some 40 years of service.

Stephen Haskell, 53, became Sublette County Sheriff in January.
The county includes eight communities, including Pinedale, which
was recently named one of ten true Western towns in the US by
True West Magazine.

However, the sheriff’s subordinates will no longer be permitted
to look like “Wild West” inhabitants as he forbade the wearing of
traditional cowboy hats and boots.

“I'm very much for the Western way of life and the look. And
that's the way I dress,” Haskell told the Casper
Star-Tribune. “However, for a professional outfit ... I like
everybody to look the same. We are one team unified in one
purpose. That is to do our job.”

“I had my patrol deputies wearing one uniform, (and) I had
detention wearing another uniform. It looked like the Skittles
platoon,” Haskel said. “We had a rainbow of colors. Who
the heck is who?”

However, this move made the longtime deputy retire. Gene Bryson
worked for some 40 years in law enforcement in the area and for
all this time, he wore a brown cowboy hat, brown cowboy boots and
a leather vest in the summer or a wool vest in the winter.

“I am not going to change. I've been here for 40-odd years in
the sheriff's office, and I'm not going to go out and buy combat
boots and throw my vest and hat away and say, ‘this is the new
me,’” Bryson told the Star tribune. “And I've had a
cowboy hat on since 19 – I don’t know. That's what looks good to
me in the sheriff's department. It's Western. It's Wyoming.”